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John Nevins Andrews (July 22, 1829 – October 21, 1883) was a Seventh-day Adventist minister, the first official Seventh-day Adventist missionary, writer, editor, and scholar. Andrews University (Michigan, USA), a university owned and operated by the Seventh-day Adventist church, is named after him.
John Nevins Andrews. John Nevins Andrews (July 22, 1829 in Poland, Maine – October 21, 1883 in Basel, Switzerland), was a Seventh-day Adventist minister, missionary, writer, editor, and scholar. J. N. Andrews was the first SDA missionary sent to countries outside North America.
John Andrews (architect) (1933–2022), architect for the CN Tower in Toronto and Gund Hall at Harvard University John Bertram Andrews (1880–1943), American economist John T. Andrews (geologist) (born 1937), professor of geological and atmospheric and oceanic sciences
In 1868-69 Michał Belina-Czechowski, a former Roman Catholic priest who had embraced Adventism in the United States, arrived at Pitești and introduced Seventh-Day Adventist doctrines into Romania. Among the approximately 12 people he converted was Thomas G. Aslan, who later made contact with John Nevins Andrews and helped him prepare a ...
The next year, a medical missionary John Nevins Andrews (grandson of Elder J. N. Andrews) and his wife Dorothy Spicer traveled to Tachienlu, an East Tibetan city located in West Sichuan. [5] They started out in a drafty wooden house where the wind blew constantly. [6] In 1921, several houses were built by the mission for general medical services.
Michał Belina Czechowski (September 25, 1818 – February 26, 1876) was a Polish Seventh-day Adventist.On an individual level, he was the first Adventist missionary to Europe, although this was initially unknown by the Seventh-day Adventist church at the time, and J. N. Andrews was the first official Seventh-day Adventist missionary.
In 1868 Daniel went to California, where he worked with John Norton Loughborough until 1870. Evangelizing French-speakers, he established churches in Wisconsin and Illinois in 1873. In 1876 he joined John Nevins Andrews for a year in Switzerland where he edited papers and carried out evangelism, also attempting to win over followers in Italy ...
His son, John N. Andrews, who grew up in this home, was one of the important pioneers of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. "The Andrews family was one of the most prominent in Paris Hill. John Nevins Andrews (1829-1883) was the first official Seventh-day Adventist oversears foreign missionary and the namesake of Andrews University.